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Ninth Sunday after
Pentecost
July 29, 2007
Sermon by The Rev. Aron Kramer, Visiting Rector
Readings
Read Bill's
sermon at Gethsemane Church
Preaching about, much less
talking about prayer is a difficult thing. Because what about those
unanswered prayers, what about those times when we feel God never got up
out of bed to answer the door. Or worse, what about those times when we
feel God gave us a snake or a scorpion instead of food and sustenance?
Prayer can be a difficult thing, some of us must be more holy than
others to have had our prayers answered, while others clearly were not
holy enough, and that is why their prayers were not answered. Today’s
Gospel is the story of how we came to have the Lord’s Prayer as our
central Christian prayer. It is the giving, the teaching of Jesus to his
disciples who desired to know how they should pray when they needed and
wanted to be in communion with God.
“There is one thing wrong with the traditional definition of prayer: it
misrepresents God.” So says Joan Chittister, a Roman Catholic theologian
and nun. She continues, "Prayer," the old definition read, was
"the raising of our hearts and minds to God." As if God were some regal,
distant judge outside ourselves. But God is not out there on a cloud
somewhere, imperious and suspecting. God is the very energy that
animates us. God is the spirit that leads us and drives us on. God is
the voice within us calling us to life. God is the reality trying to
come to fullness within us, both individually and together. It is to
that cosmic God, that personal, inner, enkindling God that we pray.”
Many of you know, Sara and I, with Eliot and Naomi experienced a
traumatic event over the past 7 or 8 months. I wrote in the Alleluia
Booklet we did this year at Gethsemane the following passage: “It was
the longest however-many-minutes of my life; I hope I never have to
experience it again. When the doctor finished telling Sara and I about
leukemia, and how this disease was affecting our little boy, and how
they would cure it, when he finished and had left the room, I remember
this feeling of great elation, great joy, great relief and I hugged Sara
like I had never held her before. It was as if I had been reborn, made
new, resurrected and given new life. Our lives had been ripped apart,
torn asunder, bared open all the way to the bone. It was a holy place
for us, in that moment that little hospital room became infected with
God's holiness; it became a thin place, a place where the Kingdom of God
and the earth we walk upon met. That hospital room became a place, a
holy place of fear and fright. We became vulnerable in our fear and in
our vulnerability were able to hear God's still small voice in our
lives, a voice of re-birth, a voice of a beloved two year old, ‘Eliot
want hug too.’”
In the days that followed we found ourselves on prayer lists all over
the world, literally all over the world, and it sparked many
conversations between Sara and I, and many people in the Cities, and
even with some of you. Many people would say to us, “We’re praying for
you.” And I would often respond with a kind thank you, or I would ask
people to pray for us. Some people didn’t know what to do or say around
us, while others said: “I do not pray because I do not believe in a God
that intervenes in life in such a way.” This last sentiment often came
from people who had lost children, or loved ones. It was always the one
that got me to thinking, what makes the prayers different if Eliot ends
up being cured, and others do not. Is it something we as a family have
done? Is it because I am a priest? Why is it Eliot walks away from this
with such vitality and energy while others do not? It is this question
that has always haunted me as I have thought and imagined what the
function of prayer is in my own life. Then today’s Gospel comes and I
begin to wonder more about what it means to pray.
There are two questions that strike me as I think about Jesus’ response
to the Disciple asking him to teach them how to pray. The first is the
prayer itself that Christ teaches, and the second is the postures Jesus
speaks of as he describes the action of prayer. First, look at what
Jesus is teaching about prayer. He does not say pray for the poor, pray
for those who are sick, pray for those experiencing a little trouble in
their lives. He does not have that sentimentality that we have come to
expect when we think about prayer. Instead he says, pray to God, and
pray that God’s Kingdom may come on earth. Evelyn Underhill, a mystic
said, “The prayer is not that we may come into the Kingdom, for this we
cannot do in our own strength. It is that the Kingdom, the Wholly Other,
may come to us, and become operative on our order; one thing working in
another, as leaven in our dough, as seed in our field.” The idea that we
would have to accommodate the Kingdom that we must adapt for the other
to come into our lives is vitally important, I believe. It is not so
much that we must be changed or simply work hard to enter the Kingdom
somewhere else, it is that we must be transformed so that we are now
able to see the Kingdom in our midst; we must see ourselves as holy
people walking upon holy ground. As Joan Chittister said, traditional
definitions of prayer are misleading, because the God we believe in is
not far from us, in a distant land or place, the God we believe in is
here, now, with us, among us, the spark of our existence, the light of
our world, today.
Jesus’ teaching also says to forgive others who have sinned against us,
and to ask simply for the bread we need for today, not bread for the
next 5 years, nor 10 years, just today, this day, the here and the now.
It is the praying for the Kingdom that has most struck me, the praying
for God’s kingdom in the world, so that we might be sent, our response
to this coming of the Kingdom is to say to God, “Here I am, send me!”
The second thing that struck me was the postures of prayer that Jesus
describes in the Gospel. Many of you may have that song stuck in your
head, or I am about to cause it to be stuck, do you know it? “Ask and it
shall be given unto you, seek and you shall find. Knock and the door
will be opened unto you. Alelu, Alleluia.” Ask and it will be given you;
search and you will find, knock and the door will be opened. When we
stop to think about the postures of these prayers it becomes clear they
are meant to bring about humility and awareness of our own dependence on
the abundance of God’s love. Asking makes us beggars. Asking takes on
that form of being on your knees and begging for help. If it weren’t for
Sara in that room, I would have been on my knees, and we both have had
to learn to ask, asking for prayer, for money, for support and what we
have found is not only a generous and abundant God, but people full of
love, joy and support, people who were as generous as I ever imagined
God to be.
Likewise, searching and knocking put us in places of vulnerability, of
humility, on our knees, or facing something we know nothing about.
Searching often leaves us on all fours looking everywhere for that which
we have lost. Knocking on a door, a door we know nothing about, a place
which we wonder what lies on the other side, leaves us to the whim of
the person or thing answering our knock. These postures of prayer tell
us a lot about the purpose of prayer, and they tell us that without
action our prayers are nothing, for as is clear in Jesus’ teaching,
Jesus did not pray for those who were oppressed because he was
liberating them, Jesus did not pray for those who were sick, he healed
them; Jesus did not pray for those who were sinful, he forgave them.
Without asking, we will never receive, without seeking we will never
find and without knocking we will always be left in the unknown.
Joan Chittister says, “We do not pray in order to coax satisfaction out
of the universe. God is life, not a vending machine full of trifles to
fit the whims of the human race.” She continues, “We pray not to appease
a divine wrath or flatter a divine ego. We pray in order, eventually, to
fall into the presence of God, to learn to live in the presence of God,
to absorb the presence of God within.” The postures we use to pray are
not simply reverent and solemn, they place us in the position of the
oppressed, the prisoners, the sick, the lame those who are in need. Our
posture of prayer is to remind us not that we need healing or that God
will take care of everything, but to remind us that there are others in
need in the world, others who must experience the holy, others we must
welcome into our warm embraces. The posture of our prayer is to coax us
into the Kingdom of God, and into our role as God’s sent people, sent
into the world to proclaim the Kingdom near, and only in our humility,
only in our meekness it is only in our prayer rooted in beauty and love
that we will discover that God is here, with us, among us, alive and
living, present and close.
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